Reporters pack up, walk out as Pentagon ‘confiscates’ almost all press badges


At least one outlet – the right-wing One America News Network – agreed to the terms.

“Today, the defence department confiscated the badges of the Pentagon reporters from virtually every major media organisation in America,” the Pentagon Press Association said in a statement.

Almost every media organisation refused to sign on to the Pentagon’s new policy for journalists based at the building.

Almost every media organisation refused to sign on to the Pentagon’s new policy for journalists based at the building.Credit: AP

“It did this because reporters would not sign on to a new media policy over its implicit threat of criminalising national security reporting and exposing those who sign it to potential prosecution.”

The group said its members would continue to cover military affairs from outside the building. “But make no mistake, this is a dark day for press freedom that raises concerns about a weakening US commitment to transparency in governance, to public accountability at the Pentagon and to free speech for all.”

Copp, who works for The Washington Post, said reporters at the Pentagon spent the day clearing out their stuff, dismantling equipment and saying goodbye. She collected numerous items of historical interest, such as signs for different media bureaus, fearing they would otherwise be lost forever.

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Later in the day, the reporters handed in their badges one by one. Copp said there was no sign the Pentagon considered a compromise as the deadline approached on Wednesday afternoon (Thursday AEST).

“Oh no, the people that instituted this basically hid from us all day. They were just in their offices, they didn’t come out,” she said.

Hegseth, a former Fox News anchor, and US President Donald Trump both defended the new policy during a news conference the previous day.

Hegseth said the policy was reasonable because Pentagon access was a privilege, not a right, and accredited journalists would “no longer [be] permitted to solicit criminal acts” by seeking controlled information.

“It’s common-sense stuff,” said Hegseth, who was in hot water earlier this year after sharing sensitive details about an imminent military operation on a group chat that included his wife, brother and personal lawyer. “We’re trying to make sure national security is respected, and we’re proud of the policy.”

Hegseth focused on changes to building access, wrongly claiming that journalists were previously allowed to go “pretty much anywhere” inside the department’s headquarters without a press badge.

But the media outlets and the Pentagon Press Association made clear it was the new restrictions on reporting and seeking information that led them to refuse to sign and thus relinquish their access.

Trump backed Hegseth, saying, “I think he finds the press to be very disruptive in terms of world peace and maybe security for our nation. The press is very dishonest.”

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He added: “When it comes to war … It bothers me to have soldiers and even high-ranking generals walking around with you guys on their sleeve because they can make a mistake and a mistake can be tragic.”

Copp accused Hegseth of misrepresenting the way Pentagon reporting worked and how the building actually operated.

“This is an attack on the First Amendment,” she said. “Despite what Hegseth and the administration are trying to argue, this is all about limiting access and limiting the public’s right to know.”

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